Rats Remember Who's Nice To Them, Give Kindness Right Back

A new study on Norway rats, the common brown rats who dominate sewers of cities around the world, shows that the rodents will remember acts of kindness by other rats and reciprocate that behavior by being kind in turn. In other words, what goes around comes around in the rat world. The study, published in the journal Biology Letters, tested the reactions of female rats to other "helper rats" who could deliver them food by pressing a lever. Those who delivered tasty bananas were considered high-quality food delivery rats, while those who delivered not-so-tasty carrots were low-quality helpers. Then, the tables were turned: the helper became the eater, and vice-versa.

In a move that shocked scientists, the new helper rats were quicker to deliver food to those who had given them delicious bananas.

"Two elements are involved: recognizing an individual, and responding to the quality of service," co-author Michael Taborsky, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Bern in Switzerland, told National Geographic.

Rats aren't always considered the smartest of non-human animals, but they've demonstrated high intelligence in many areas. They have complex systems of social communication, can learn to predict rewards and even display altruistic behavior toward other rats, like freeing their comrades from cages.